Then, there is Jem Finch, also known as just Jem. Jem is exceedingly brave and shows a lot of growth and empathy throughout the novel. Jem is the older brother and he is going through puberty and now he shows it through some of the novel. Growth and empathy are shown various times throughout the novel. “It ain 't right, somehow it ain 't right to do 'em that way.
Micaela Tracey English 12 Derosa Per. 2 5/21/24 TTTC and Platoon Essay The Vietnam War was a very gruesome, and unsettling time for many soldiers who went to fight in the war. Being a soldier in the Vietnam War could turn an innocent man into someone who ended up killing many opposing soldiers. The Vietnam War was no joke and many soldiers were faced with that reality the longer they spent in their platoons.
In the book “To Kill A Mockingbird” there are numerous coming-of-age events with Jem and Scout, who are brother and sister. Scout is a different type of girl, she wears clothes that make her look like a tomboy, has her hair cut short to her shoulders and is innocent and naive. Jem is a boy who is starting to spark an interest in things such as football and guns. Scout and Jem grow up in a time of racial discrimination and segregation in Maycomb, Alabama. Yet, have a father who shows them a disparate perspective of thinking.
In “To Kill A Mockingbird,” the author of the novel, Harper Lee, communicates many themes through her story, often involving racism, the trials and tribulations of growing up, and the many sides of life itself. One of the most profound themes of this novel, however, concerns the loss of one innocence, and how this may affect their view on life. The author conveys this theme by using the juxtaposition of Scout and Jem Finch. One side of this theme is shown thorough Jem, the eldest son of the family. Jem shares most of his experiences with Scout, and he shows a level of maturity beyond his years, which is maintained through the most challenging of situations.
In To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee, Jem grows from a little boy to an intelligent young man. Throughout the book, he discerns many things that shape his personality. As Jem grows, he learns how bad society is and that not everyone is perfect. Fortunately for Jem, this ends up helping him and he finds out that Atticus is a hero and that he should look up to Atticus. Through Atticus and the trial, Jem loses his innocence by learning about prejudice, bravery, and that the justice system is crippled.
Jem chooses to follow in his father's footsteps rather than jump in with the crowd and claim that all African Americans are bad. Jem’s decision to
Jem idolizes his father and views him as the embodiment of justice and morality at the beginning. However, as Jem became more aware of the world around him, he began to question Atticus' principles. For example,Jem is disappointed when Atticus agrees to defend Tom Robinson, knowing that he will bring ridicule and scorn from the people inside of Maycomb county. However his disappointment turns into admiration when he witnesses Atticus’s to stand up for what is right in the trial.
Jem played all day long with his little sister Scout Finch spent their days just playing and not having to think how harsh the real world is because your innocence has shown you how you think the world is and it doesn't show you the truth. As Jem enters puberty, he sees that not only he changed as a person, but the world as well. It affects him more knowing what’s going on with Tom Robinson’s trial with this Jem Finch’s life is complicated and traumatic. His curiosity gets him to start asking questions to Atticus, his father about his town. He questions racism, justice, judgment, and femininity he wants to know more about them since he is seeing them more often.
Throughout the novel, Jem shows many aspects of his coming of age and becoming like his father, but one great example of his development is his view
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird the theme is, the world is different in the eyes of a child. Jem says that if he were on that jury then he would let Tom Robinson free and Atticus explains, “‘If you had been on that jury, son and eleven other boys like you Tom would be a free man,’ said Atticus ‘so far nothing in your life has interfered with your reasoning process. Those are twelve reasonable men in everyday life, Tom’s jury, but you saw something come between them and reason…’”(Lee 295). In the quote Atticus explains to Jem why his mind is childlike by telling him that his reasoning process has not been tampered with and that the grown men’s way of reason is more advanced than his.
Atticus once said, “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view--until you climb into his skin and walk around in it” (Lee 16). The previous line is a perfect definition of compassion, a trait many desire but seem to lack. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee is a shining example of this solicitude, which she shows through many examples within the novel. Through the plethora of characters a few shine or learn to shine with compassion: Jem, Reverend Sykes, and Heck. Their actions could be comparably small but have a large impact on those around them.
Jem, a young and smart boy develops and matures through many unique situations in the novel. Jem is exposed to the harsh belief, judgement and circumstances of the court at a very young age. Following his father, Jem involves himself in the trial between Tom Robinson and Mayella Ewell yet takes Tom’s side due to his father's involvement. Jem slowly loses faith in the justice system and is faced with a loss of innocence as explained by Scout“It was Jem’s turn to cry. His face was streaked with angry tears as we made our way through the cheerful crowd.
Jem is the son of Atticus, and the brother of the narrator, Scout. Jem is a good big brother to scout and he doesn't have a problem with African Americans. “Guilty. . . guilty. . .
Scout who is not only related to Jem, but is the narrator of the story. The reader does not see how Jem grows through his eyes, but through Scouts. In the beginning of the novel, Jem is a naive boy. Not only Jem believes in the rumors being
He worked in an office, not in a drugstore” (118). Jem thinks his father is not like all the other dads, he does not play baseball or take them hunting like all the other kid’s father at school. Jem thinks that he is too old to do anything with them. Further on, Jem starts to understand Atticus and his ways, especially when he took the case for Tom Robinson, a black man accused of raping a white girl. He sees Atticus as a respectable person throughout the trial because he stood up for a wrongly accused black man.